19 N.Y.S. 776 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
This action was prosecuted upon a promissory note made by John H. Buso and Harriet L. Buso, payable to Thomas Alexander, and by him transferred by indorsement before maturity to John Gr. Myers, who indorsed the same before maturity, and transferred it to the plaintiff. The action is prosecuted against the makers and first indorser of the note. The answer put in issue all of the allegations of the complaint, except the execution and delivery of the note. The proof shows that the defendant Alexander indorsed this note, and transferred it to John Gr. Myers, receiving for it at the time $10 in money. Myers transferred it to plaintiff for $20 cash, and a credit of $8 for meat, which he bought of plaintiff on "an agreement to pay cash. The defendant Alexander testified in his own behalf, under objection of the plaintiff, to the transaction between him and Myers at the time he let Myers have the note, that he was boarding at Myers’ hotel, "and wanted money, and got a loan of $10, and left the note with Myers as security, and at the same time wrote his name on the back of the note, at Myers’ request. This was before the note became due. He also testified that he offered to pay Myers the $10 he got of him at the time he let him have the note, and $5 for the use of it. This evidence was objected to by the plaintiff, aud stricken out,
But it is insisted on the part of the defendant that all of these facts depend upon the testimony of the plaintiff, and that, as there was no other witness to support the plaintiff’s case than himself, the case should for that reason alone have been submitted to the jury, and the refusal of the learned judge to submit it was for that reason error, for which the judgment should be set aside. With the testimony of the defendant out of this case, its determination must to a great extent depend upon the credence that attaches to the testimony of the plaintiff. His testimony, with the corroboration only of the possession of the note and the indorsement of the defendant, established his right of recovery, if that right is established in this action. It has been repeatedly held that when the plaintiff’s right to recover rests solely on his testimony, or when his evidence is a necessary element to a recovery, and stands alone, the credit to which he is entitled is a question for the jury. In Joy v. Diefendorf, (N. Y. App.) 28 N. E. Rep. 602, the principal defense relied upon to defeat a recovery was that plaintiff was not a bona jide holder ■of the note, and the only witness on the part of the plaintiff to establish that proposition was the plaintiff’s own evidence, and a verdict for the plaintiff under the direction of the court was set aside, and judgment entered thereon reversed, on the ground that the question should have been submitted to the jury. To the same effect is the case of Vosburgh v. Diefendorf, 119 N. Y. 357, 23 N. E. Rep. 801; Bank v. Diefendorf, 123 N. Y. 191, 25 N. E. Rep. 402. We think this case comes within the principle of those decisions, and that this case under proper instructions should have been submitted to the jury, and that the refusal of the learned judge to submit it on the request of the defendant’s counsel was error.
Judgment reversed, and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.